PetroChina Profit Falls as Oil Prices and Fuel Demand Dip

PetroChina, the largest oil and gas producer in China, reported on Tuesday a 5.4% decline in first-half profit as oil prices fell from a year earlier and domestic fuel demand continued to be pressured by the rise in new-energy vehicle sales. 

PetroChina booked $11.75 billion (84 billion Chinese yuan) in profit for the first half of the year, down by 5.4% from the record-high profit for same period last year. 

Amid lower benchmark oil prices, PetroChina’s average realized crude oil price was $66.21 per barrel between January and June 2025, down by 14.5% from $77.45 per barrel for the same period last year.

Revenues in the refining and chemicals business slumped by 12.8% from last year, primarily due to lower prices of refined products and most chemical products.  

“The domestic refined oil products market continued to be affected by alternative energies, and the consumption of natural gas domestically was basically stable,” PetroChina said in its earnings release. 

“In the first half of 2025, the competition of alternative energy accelerated and the consumption of gasoline and diesel in China continued to be suppressed,” the state energy giant said, noting that kerosene demand saw the only growth in fuel consumption amid continued recovery of the air travel market. 

Looking forward to the second half of 2025, PetroChina said that “The domestic refined oil products market will continue to face competition from alternative energy, and the demand of the natural gas market will recover to relatively rapid growth.” 

Last week, the largest Chinese and Asian refiner, Sinopec, reported a 36% decline in first-half profit on the back of lower oil prices and refining margins and weakening domestic fuel demand. 

Sinopec also flagged a 3.6% drop in domestic consumption of refined petroleum products, “mainly affected by alternative energy.” 

Over the past year, consumption of the road transportation fuels – gasoline and diesel – has been trailing the levels from just two years ago, when China was emerging from nearly three years of Covid-related lockdowns. That’s not only because of the pent-up demand back in 2023. A large part of the lower gasoline and diesel demand is due to the soaring sales of electric passenger cars and trucks and LNG-fueled heavy-duty vehicles.

By Michael Kern for Oilprice.com

More Top Reads From Oilprice.com

 

  • Related Posts

    US-Iran Talks to Span Past Summer As Oil Flows Remain Disrupted

    A U.S.-Iran peace deal is not weeks away. Officials in the Gulf region are bracing for a timeline closer to six months. The Strait of Hormuz remains effectively shut. Flows…

    Hormuz Crisis Forces Rethink on Alternative Marine Fuels Investment

    The escalation of conflict across the Middle East and the disruption to energy flows through the Strait of Hormuz have introduced a variable into the maritime energy transition that regulatory…

    Have You Seen?

    Inpex adds LNG carrier capacity amid rising supply fears

    • April 17, 2026
    Inpex adds LNG carrier capacity amid rising supply fears

    Poland’s Gaz-System heads toward EU hydrogen TSO status

    • April 17, 2026
    Poland’s Gaz-System heads toward EU hydrogen TSO status

    ITM Power joins Rheinmetall’s plans for hydrogen-based defence e-fuel network

    • April 17, 2026
    ITM Power joins Rheinmetall’s plans for hydrogen-based defence e-fuel network

    Trump’s Energy Leaders to Hold Call With CEOs on Iran War, Source Says

    • April 17, 2026
    Trump’s Energy Leaders to Hold Call With CEOs on Iran War, Source Says

    US-Iran Talks to Span Past Summer As Oil Flows Remain Disrupted

    • April 17, 2026
    US-Iran Talks to Span Past Summer As Oil Flows Remain Disrupted

    Analysis: Why government warnings are a sign of progress in the CO2 conversation

    • April 16, 2026
    Analysis: Why government warnings are a sign of progress in the CO2 conversation

    Analysis: Why government warnings are a sign of progress in the CO₂ conversation

    • April 16, 2026
    Analysis: Why government warnings are a sign of progress in the CO₂ conversation

    The Iran War Has Shattered Oil’s Price Compass: Bousso

    • April 16, 2026
    The Iran War Has Shattered Oil’s Price Compass: Bousso

    Fire at Domestic Refinery Worsens Australia’s Fuel Supply Crisis

    • April 16, 2026
    Fire at Domestic Refinery Worsens Australia’s Fuel Supply Crisis

    Iran Suspends Petrochemical Exports to Avoid Domestic Shortages

    • April 16, 2026
    Iran Suspends Petrochemical Exports to Avoid Domestic Shortages